Synopses & Reviews
A blistering debut that does for the Iraqi perspective on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan what Phil Klay's
Redeployment does for the American perspective.
The first major literary work about the Iraq War from an Iraqi perspective by an explosive new voice hailed as perhaps the best writer of Arabic fiction alive” (The Guardian) The Corpse Exhibition shows us the war as we have never seen it before. Here is a world not only of soldiers and assassins, hostages and car bombers, refugees and terrorists, but also of madmen and prophets, angels and djinni, sorcerers and spirits.
Blending shocking realism with flights of fantasy, The Corpse Exhibition offers us a pageant of horrors, as haunting as the photos of Abu Ghraib and as difficult to look away from, but shot through with a gallows humor that yields an unflinching comedy of the macabre. Gripping and hallucinatory, this is a new kind of storytelling forged in the crucible of war.
Review
“Surreal and mind-blowing and completely necessary.” Jayne Anne Phillips, The Wall Street Journal, “Favorite Books of the Year”
Review
“Arresting, auspicious....Well-plotted, blackly comic....Sharp, tragicomic moments...persist in memory....Mr. Blasim's stories owe more than a little of their dream logic to [Carlos] Fuentes and Serling, with maybe some Julio Cortázar thrown in....Their sequence imparts a mounting novelistic power.” The New York Times
Review
“Superb....The existence of this book is reason for hope, proof of the power of storytelling.” The Boston Globe
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“Subtly and powerfully evocative....Superbly translated.” The New York Review of Books
Review
“Powerful, moving and deeply descriptive....All the stories share a complexity and depth that will appeal to readers of literary fiction [and] fans of Günter Grass, Gabriel García Márquez or Jorge Luis Borges.” Kirkus Reviews
Review
“The first story alone blew me away. Don't miss.” Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal
Synopsis
A blistering debut that does for the Iraqi perspective on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan what Phil Klay's Redeployment does for the American perspective
" A] wonderful collection." --George Saunders, The New York Times Book Review
The first major literary work about the Iraq War from an Iraqi perspective--by an explosive new voice hailed as "perhaps the best writer of Arabic fiction alive" (The Guardian)--The Corpse Exhibition shows us the war as we have never seen it before. Here is a world not only of soldiers and assassins, hostages and car bombers, refugees and terrorists, but also of madmen and prophets, angels and djinni, sorcerers and spirits.
Blending shocking realism with flights of fantasy, The Corpse Exhibition offers us a pageant of horrors, as haunting as the photos of Abu Ghraib and as difficult to look away from, but shot through with a gallows humor that yields an unflinching comedy of the macabre. Gripping and hallucinatory, this is a new kind of storytelling forged in the crucible of war.
About the Author
Hassan Blasim was born in Baghdad in 1973 and studied at the Baghdad Academy of Cinematic Arts. A critic of Saddam Hussein's regime, he was persecuted and in 1998 fled Baghdad to Iraqi Kurdistan, where he made films and taught filmmaking under the pseudonym Ouazad Osman. In 2004, a year into the war, he fled to Finland, where he now lives. A filmmaker, poet, and fiction writer, he has published in various magazines and anthologies and is a coeditor of the Arabic literary website www.iraqstory.com. His fiction has twice won the English PEN Writers in Tranlsation award and has been translated into Finnish, Polish, Spanish, and Italian. In 2012 a heavily edited version of his stories was finally published in Arabic and was immediately banned in Jordan.
Jonathan Wright studied Arabic at Oxford University and has spent much of the last three decades in the Arab world, primarily as a journalist with Reuters.